Hong Kong and Taiwan Are Bonding Over China

Freedom AS LONG AS YOU AGREE WITH THE NARRATIVE.


I have being already labelled by you fake freedom supporters as a communist for not supporting this obvious regime change and protest movement which had being started up by NGOs and including by Soros as well.

You don't support the brave protestors? you must be a communist or a propagandist of China! if anything this protesting that is happening in HK is exposing you NeoCons that love protests whenever they fit your interests.

Yea you've been doubling down since page 1 and its not looking good for you.

Your line of thought would also be telling the American colonists to end the revolution and get back in line to serve the British Empire.




And here it is, when Yaron Brook even knows supporting HK is the right thing to do, you know you've gone too far.



 
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An August 20 article in the Singapore-based Straits Times noted that the number of people moving from Hong Kong to Taiwan has risen rapidly in recent months, and during the first seven months of 2019 is up 28 percent compared to a year earlier. The Times attributes this increase to the “anti-government protests that have swept the former British colony amid fear that its autonomy from Beijing is being eroded.”

More at: https://www.thenewamerican.com/worl...an-s-offer-of-asylum-for-hong-kong-protesters
 
Taiwan’s top diplomat said Tuesday that his government stands with Hong Kong citizens pushing for “freedom and democracy,” and would help those displaced from the semi-autonomous Chinese city if Beijing intervenes with greater force to quell the protests.Speaking to The Associated Press in Taipei, Foreign Minister Joseph Wu was careful to say his government has no desire to intervene in Hong Kong’s internal affairs, and that existing legislation is sufficient to deal with a relatively small number of Hong Kong students or others seeking to reside in Taiwan.
But he added that Hong Kong police have responded with “disproportionate force” to the protests. He said that any intervention by mainland Chinese forces would be “a new level of violence” that would prompt Taiwan to take a different stance in helping those seeking to leave Hong Kong.
“When that happens, Taiwan is going to work with the international community to provide necessary assistance to those who are displaced by the violence there,” he said.


“The people here understand that how the Chinese government treats Hong Kong is going to be the future way of them treating Taiwan. And what turned out in Hong Kong is not very appealing to the Taiwanese people,” Wu said.
China’s Communist Party insists that Taiwan is part of China and must be reunited with it, even if by force. Modern Taiwan was founded when Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists, who once ruled on the mainland, were forced to retreat to the island in 1949 after the Communists took power in the Chinese Civil War.
Beijing has suggested that Taiwan could be reunited under the “one country, two systems” model that applied to Hong Kong after the former British colony was returned to China in 1997. That agreement allowed Hong Kong to keep its civil liberties, independent courts and capitalist system, though many in Hong Kong accuse Beijing of undermining those freedoms under President Xi Jinping.
Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen has said that the “one country, two systems” model has failed in Hong Kong and brought the city to “the brink of disorder.”
Government surveys earlier this year showed that about 80% of Taiwanese citizens oppose reunification with China.

More at: https://www.yahoo.com/news/ap-interview-taiwan-may-help-111618072.html
 
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